Kenya:
Pan Paper plans to expand its polluting operations
Earlier this year,
in an attempt to discourage the use of plastic bags, the Kenyan
government slapped a 120 per cent tax on plastic. While the tax
may look like an environmentally friendly decision, it could result
in severe impacts on the environment. One of the beneficiaries
of the decision will be the partly government-owned Pan African
Paper Mills.
Pan Paper has reported
huge losses in recent years and has debts estimated at US$100
million, according to The East African. Much of the debt will
mature in the next two years. In April 2007, the company appointed
a new management team after the company's lenders hired consultants
McKinsey to suggest ways of reviving the company's fortunes. The
plastic tax could provide a lifeline to Pan Paper.
Packaging company
Tetra Pak is already expanding production in Kenya. "We would
like to increase our sourcing of raw materials from Pan Paper.
We are discussing with them to find if they can produce more of
the raw materials that we need," Anders Lindgren, Tetra Pak's
managing director told Business Daily in July 2007. Pan Paper
recently announced plans to spend US$1.19 million planting six
million trees over the next year.
Pan Paper currently
has a production capacity of 120,000 tonnes of paper a year at
its mill in Webuye. Established in 1974, the company is a joint
venture between Orient Paper and Industries (part of India's Birla
Group) the Kenyan Government and the World Bank's International
Finance Corporation.
The involvement of
the IFC means that, in theory at least, the pulp and paper mill
should meet the IFC's social and environmental guidelines. But
IFC's own staff admit that there is a conflict of interest between
protecting the environment and the economic interests of company's
in which IFC is a shareholder.
In 1996, when IFC
lent a further US$15 million to Pan Paper for an expansion of
the pulp and paper mill, IFC did not demand a full environmental
assessment. Instead IFC relied on information provided by the
company. IFC noted that Pan Paper "has made commitment to
fully comply with World Bank policies and guidelines".
IFC promised to "monitor
Panafrican Paper's ongoing compliance with World Bank policies
and guidelines during the life of the project." In 2003,
IFC promised more financial assistance for the restructuring of
Pan African Paper Mills. Unfortunately, IFC's monitoring of Pan
Paper only involves reading reports submitted by the company and
"periodic site reviews during project supervision".
Pan Paper is, of
course, keen to keep its problems hidden. For example, at a conference
on "sustainable consumption and production" in 2004,
Pan Paper's John M. Khaoya talked about "maintaining a delicate
balancing between environment and profits". He talked about
best available technologies, best environmental practices, pollution
prevention and waste minimisation. He talked about employee training
and awareness. He talked about corporate social responsibility
and the community projects Pan Paper has funded. He talked about
sustainable use of renewable resources. He talked about compliance
with environmental regulations and of working "hand-in-hand"
with the promoters of cleaner production. He talked about a "'win-win'
situation for industry and environment".
Michael Ochieng Odhiambo,
of the Kenyan NGO RECONCILE, has a different view of Pan Paper's
operations. Writing earlier this year in the newsletter of the
Western Kenya Environmental Law Centre he describes the "noxious
stench" from the mill: "Many regular travellers on this
route will close the windows of cars or buses as they approach
the factory in order to avoid the stench. But for the residents
of the town this is something they have to live with."
Odhiambo lists the
health problems that residents of Webuye complain of as a result
of the pollution from Pan Paper's operations: "irritation
of the eyes and respiratory tracts, dry mouths and scratchy throats,
gross accumulation of fluid in air spaces impairing the functioning
of the lungs, cancer of the lung and throat, asthma, bronchitis,
bronchial pneumonia, conjunctivitis, hepatitis, dermatitis, tuberculosis,
impotence, babies born with stunted reproductive organs, retarded
intelligence among children, and high levels of respiratory diseases."
But pollution from
the pulp and paper mill is not the only problem that Pan Paper
creates. Further problems come from the supply of raw material
to the mill. In 2001, the Ogiek people living in the Mau mountain
forest accused Pan Paper of logging in their forest areas. For
the last four years, the problems caused by Pan Paper's mill,
logging and plantations operations have been raised in the Kenyan
Parliament.
Today, industrial
tree plantations cover about 160,000 hectares in Kenya. Three-quarters
are planted with cypress and pine trees but eucalyptus trees are
increasingly planted in Kenya - using seedlings from South Africa.
A recent article in The Nation (Nairobi) notes that "eucalyptus
and other exotic species are fast replacing indigenous trees in
many . . . parts of the country". The result has been drying
up springs and streams. The article suggests that eucalyptus plantations
have made droughts in the country even more severe.
By promoting the
polluting pulp and paper industry, the government's plastic tax
will end up having some very unpleasant environmental and social
impacts.
By Chris Lang,
http://chrislang.org